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Atlanta Child Murders — Part 24
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that the children's °..i1 rights have been viota ad. Further I am
charging that the it, roper and indifferent treat. nt accorded the
children's deaths by law enforcement officials and the inadequate
and insensitive response to parents is proof~-positive that they
were ignored because of color. It is fair to assume that our
government leaders would have declared a state of emergency (and
conceivably a state of war) had the thirty victims been white,
Slain en masse, and virtually ignored by law enforcement officials.
In my response to the parents to seek justice beyond the state of
Georgia, I appeal to you under Title IX of the Civil Rights Act of
1964, Section 902 which authorizes the intervention of the United
States government in civil rights cases. It states:
"Whenever an action has been commenced in any
court of the United States seeking relief
from the denial of equal protection of the
laws under the Fourteenth Amendment to the
Constitution on account of race, color, reli-
gion, or national origin, the Attorney General
for and in the name of the United States may
intervene in such action upon timely applica-
tion if the Attorney General certifies that
the case is of general public importance. In
such action the United States shall be entit-
led to the same relief as if it had instituted
the action."
63 Stat. 102
Title 28 of the U.S. Code
Section 1447(d)
General Overview
During the summer of 1979, a crisis of unparalled proportions came
to light in Atlanta, Georgia that was to continue for the next two
years. Black children and young adults were murdered in massive
numbers. The murderer(s) of unknown identity stalked the streets
of the city snatching and killing our children and dropping their
bodies along highways, byways, and in rivers.
During the period, a total of thirty young persons were identified
as victims of the mass slaying and placed on an official Task Force
List for on-going investigation. The group included twenty-five
(25) children and five (5) young adults. Children ages ranged from
7 to 17; young adults, 18-28.
On June 21, 1981, a suspect, Wayne B. Williams, was apprehended near
the Chattachoochee River--adumping ground for many of the victims.
Williams was subsequently charged for the murder of two adults--
Jimmy Ray Payne, 21 and Nathaniel Cater, 27 and convicted on both
counts following a nine-week trial during the first part of 1982.
The books have been closed on cases that have indeed not been prose-
cuted with an understanding that they all can be linked to Wayne
Williams--without the benefit of trial by jury. There is no prece-
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